One less bloatware on Windows 11.

  • suzucappo@lemmy.ml
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    3 days ago

    Thing is, having to run a startup script to “remove” it means it’s not being removed. It’s being hindered at each boot.

    Fighting against copilot has been a struggle as Microsoft consistently tries to inject it into every single application they can during updates.

    We deal with very restrictive international regulations and the fact that they have not simple made a “fuck off” check box is going to get them into a boiling pot once the data they are scraping after ever update that reactively needs to be remediated gets added to their stupid “ai” and is able to be accessed.

    Microsoft needs to get their shit together and provide and opt-in during OS install (corporate or not). A large banner should be displayed over the whole screen for 10 seconds “MICROSOFT IS TAKING ALL OF YOUR DATA AND SHOVING IT INTO A DATABASE THAT CAN POTENTIALLY BE ACCESSED BY ANYONE, AND THIS INCLUDES INFORMATION RESTRICTED BY INTERNATIONAL LAW, SOCIAL SECURITY NUMBERS AND ANY PERSONALLY IDENTIFYING INFORMATION YOU HAVE ON YOUR COMPUTER” so that and users know that they are being sold and not an owner of what they are paying for.

    • Fontasia@feddit.nl
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      2 days ago

      It does not need to run at every startup, it just needs to run once.

      AppXProvisioned packages are those into the system that which are available to install to each new user. I’ve just suggested “an option” which would be running it as a start up script the first time you provision the machine. I think it’s a much better option to use policy.

      Updatss to both Copilot applications are performed based on the state of the appxpaclage.

      I think thousands of mouse clicks, error messages and browsing history of tens of millions of hundreds of millions of people is a lot harder to use maliciously than people think.

      You can see the starting points of the agentic OS, which will serve the vast majority of people. But it is frustrating to see how slow “do this task” prompts are going to progress just because there’s not a lot of good sources for prompts. Apart from asking people wheat prompt they would use and then asking for feedback of what should have happened.

      • Typhoon@lemmy.ca
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        2 days ago

        I think thousands of mouse clicks, error messages and browsing history of tens of millions of hundreds of millions of people is a lot harder to use maliciously than people think.

        I don’t care how hard it is to use. THEY SHOULDN’T HAVE IT IN THE FIRST PLACE.

        • Fontasia@feddit.nl
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          2 days ago

          Coding is hard and telemetry is a good way to solve problems. I don’t know how you work on something as complex as an operating system without it.

          • Typhoon@lemmy.ca
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            2 days ago

            “My job would be harder if I didn’t spy on you” isn’t the rebuttal you think it is.

            • Fontasia@feddit.nl
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              2 days ago

              “spying on you” sounds scary… Until you actually think about the person at the other end. A development team tracking a race condition. A mix of people from around the world doing text tagging on screenshots or transcribing voice recordings.

              “Your operating system is spying on you” becomes just a dog whistle for “I’m the main character” types because it immediately fails when you start thinking about how it would have to work.

              “But they have all this person information on me and they keep trying to sign me up to OneDrive! Any government could just bribe them and get access to it all!” Yes, and then need to recruit and employ thousands of government workers to sift through it looking for dissidence.

              Far cheaper and much easier to go through already state owned information or bribe ISPs or just do what’s always worked and… Make stuff up.

              The only real value to this information is trying to work out why the latest cumulative update has introduced a printing bug. Nearly all apps ask for you to turn this on and it’s not so they can get your browsing habits, it’s so they don’t have to respond to thousands of angry forum messages that something is not working and then guide every single one of them through the same 10 steps to collect log files and ask about what they were doing and their environment.